Human Metapneumovirus Infections during COVID-19 Pandemic, Spain

We describe an unusual outbreak of respiratory infections caused by human metapneumovirus in children during the sixth wave of COVID-19 in Spain, associated with the Omicron variant. Patients in this outbreak were older than usual and showed more hypoxia and pneumonia, longer length of stay, and greater need for intensive care.

R espiratory infections caused by human metapneumovirus (hMPV) are typically epidemic during February-April. hMPV infections cause bronchiolitis and recurrent wheezing episodes and are responsible for hospitalizations mainly in children <2 years of age (1). The COVID-19 pandemic has changed the epidemiology of respiratory viral infections, modifying the classic seasonality of respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), influenza, and other viruses (2)(3)(4). In Spain, an outbreak of pediatric hMPV infections was identified in November-December 2021, coinciding with the sixth wave of COVID-19 in the country. This study aimed to describe this outbreak and to compare it with previous hMPV outbreaks, before the COVID-19 pandemic.
We retrospectively collected data from respiratory hMPV infections requiring hospitalization in children <18 years of age during October-December 2021 in La Paz University Hospital (Madrid, Spain) and analyzed clinical characteristics. We performed multiple PCR respiratory panels as standard clinical practice in children in whom infection by RSV, influenza, and SARS-CoV-2 had previously been ruled out by rapid test or PCR.
We obtained data from a systematic prospective study conducted over 15 years in all hospitalized children with respiratory infections in Severo Ochoa University Hospital (Madrid) using multiple PCR panels performed at the National Center for Microbiology. This study was approved by the hospital ethics committee. We compared clinical data from hospitalized patients in 2021 with our historical series of hMPV infections collected during 2005-2020, before the CO-VID-19 pandemic.

RESEARCH LETTERS
We describe an unusual outbreak of respiratory infections caused by human metapneumovirus in children during the sixth wave of COVID-19 in Spain, associated with the Omicron variant. Patients in this outbreak were older than usual and showed more hypoxia and pneumonia, longer length of stay, and greater need for intensive care. days, hypoxia 5 (IQR 3.5-7.5) days, and admission, 6 (IQR 4-8) days. We compared the data from those recent patients with data from 498 cases of hMPV infection at the hospital during 2005-2020. During that period, 9 (1.8%) cases were detected in November-December and 453 (90.9%) during February-May. Patients in the 2021 season were older than those from the previous 15-year period and had significantly higher rates of hypoxia, pneumonia, antimicrobial drug treatment; they also had longer durations of fever, hypoxia, hospital admission, and PICU admission (Table 1).
In November-December 2021, during the sixth wave of COVID-19 in Spain, the country experienced an extemporaneous hMPV outbreak at the time when RSV epidemic was usually observed. This outbreak of hMPV infections affected children older than were usually affected in previous years; we also observed a more severe clinical course and higher rates of hypoxia, pneumonia, and admission to PICU than historically.
We considered that there may have been competition between respiratory viruses that could justify the delay in the RSV outbreak (5), which occurred in summer (June-July) 2021 in Spain; such competition was not the case for the hMPV outbreak, which coincided with spread of the Omicron variant of SARS-CoV-2. One possible explanation is relaxation of social distancing measures or the extreme contagiousness of Omicron. The increased severity of illness could be partly explained by the absence of hMPV infections in the previous 2 years, resulting in a susceptible population of older children who had not had previous hMPV infections and therefore had no immunity. In previous seasons, children >1 year of age were immunized by previous infections or even through residual maternal protection; this protection did not exist in 2021, and older children were infected. In conclusion, this outbreak illustrates that clinicians should be aware of potential differences in the epidemiology of other viral respiratory infections during and after the COVID-19 pandemic.